Made a quick video to illustrate the issues:
https://youtu.be/SwBtxqTqsHc
** Summary changed:
- Fractional scaling does not persist across reboots in resizable VM windows
+ Fractional scaling does not persist while resizing or rebooting in VM windows
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Behaviour seems somewhat improved but the root issue is still there.
When rebooting with VMware Player running the scaling is now remembered
correctly, however if I then shut the VM down completely and restart it,
it still starts up at first in default screen size, removing the
scaling.
Also the
I can confirm this does seem to 'fix' the issue. At first the seamless
mouse gets in some "hybrid state" where I can move the mouse out of the
window, but the Ubuntu screen still shows it stuck at the corner. When I
then resize the screen it snaps back to normal behaviour. I suppose that
supports t
Wayland doesn't work at all, hangs for 5+ minutes after login in VMware
(this reflects my experiences with Wayland on 18.04 and 18.10 in VMware,
don't think I've ever seen it work properly).
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Considering that Mutter indeed knows that a monitor is virtual -
shouldn't it just ignore resolution completely for resolving existing
configuration? It changes all the time while dragging windows on the
host machine, maximizing, minimizing etc
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One can easily reproduce this by running:
xrandr --output Virtual1 --scale 0.8x0.8
This will kill the seamless mouse directly.
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1885025
Title:
Seamless
Thanks Daniel for referencing that comment, it's indeed also relevant
here.
It seems weird as a whole that the available scaling options appear to
depend on common monitor resolutions. As stated there at 3840x2075
(that's 4k minus the VMware window borders) I see the
100/125/175/175/250 selector,
I think I just found out the real issue, and that information is not
going to help you because it will contain seemingly random indicators
depending on how I size my windows.
VMware Player, like most virtualization software, runs windowed by
default, and that window is dynamically resizeable. Now
Public bug reported:
When opening the Settings, select Displays and then enable "Fractional
Scaling". The Scale options change to 100% / 125% / 175% / 175% / 250%
If you click the first 175% option it will even automatically select the
second one instead.
The third option should likely be 150% i
gnome-shell seems to be the right one, filed
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-shell/+bug/1885026
This bug can continue to be about the missing persistence.
** Summary changed:
- Fractional scaling broken in VMware Player
+ Fractional scaling not persisted in VMware Player
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Public bug reported:
As previously indicated in
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/mutter/+bug/1884754
When Ubuntu 20.04 is installed in VMware Player 15.5.6, and you change
the display scaling, the mouse becomes "locked" to the window until the
next reboot, as if open-vm-tools is no longe
I opened https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/open-vm-
tools/+bug/1885025 for the open-vm-tools issue, I don't know for which
package I should file the bug with the missing 150% setting.
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Public bug reported:
Related to
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/mutter/+bug/1825593,
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-shell/+bug/1852860, but
those report the issues are fixed. They also do not mention the VMware
specific issues.
Install Ubuntu 20.04 in VMware Player, ins
As a sidenote: the "Fractional scaling selector" in display settings
allows me to choose between 100%, 125%, 175%, 175% and 250%. Note the
duplicate 175% that should likely be 150%.
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https
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